1 / 25

School Finance, Weekend 2 Administering the School Budget

School Finance, Weekend 2 Administering the School Budget. Administering a School Budget.

rusty
Download Presentation

School Finance, Weekend 2 Administering the School Budget

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. School Finance, Weekend 2Administering the School Budget

  2. Administering a School Budget “A good principal must first possess the basic skills necessary to keep a school running. That is, a principal must be well-grounded in budgeting and other nuts and bolts processes at the heart of a functioning school.” -Kent Peterson (1995)

  3. State Aid Primer • Public School Funding comes from 3 sources: • Federal: 4% • State: 44% = state aid, grants • Local: 52% = local revenues, property tax • State Aid comes from the State General Fund • 90% General Fund: state income tax, sales tax • 10% Special Revenue Fund: lottery

  4. 2000-2001 School Funding Facts • 56% State Aid to districts was unrestricted general aid • 15% State Aid was designated for students with disabilities • 29% transportation, capital projects, higher learning standards, etc.

  5. Local Revenue Facts • BOE can levy taxes on residential and commercial properties • Big 5 cities do not levy taxes but are bound by constitutional limits • Buffalo, Rochester, Syracuse, Yonkers, NYC • Small City School Districts can vote on school budgets since 1997.

  6. Administering a School Budget • The “Budget”: • A financial plan that involves: • Planning • Receiving funds • Spending funds • Evaluating results • Fixed time period “the translation of educational needs into a financial plan which is interpreted to the public in such a way that when formally adopted it expresses the kind of educational program the community is willing to support, financially & morally, for a one year period.”

  7. Purposes of Budgetary Practices Projects the educational plan of the district, and informs the community. • Presents the sources of funding, anticipated expenditures, and allocation plan for disbursing the funds • Guide for evaluating a year’s program. • Motivation for careful planning, systems of control, expenditure of funds • Frames the relationship of the state, federal and local support for education.

  8. Phase 1: Budget Planning • Determining the needs of the educational program • What are the goals of the school? • What services of the school need to be increased? • What is the state and/or federal issue, this year? • Effect of cost of living on salary needs? • What else?

  9. Phase 1: Budget Planning • Cooptating support for a budget plan • Involving constituents • Working with the community, PTO’s, community organizations, etc. • Planning sessions with the BOE • Community meetings • What else?

  10. Phase 1: Budget Planning • Preparing the needs and wants • Building and department requests • Comparison of information from previous years • Equipment and supply needs • Comparing the costs for the “wish list” with reality figures • Cost of living • Knowledge of the community

  11. Phase 1: Budget Planning • Salary Schedules, benefits, etc • Statistical summary of data • Enrollment • Staffing • Average Daily Attendance • Pupil-Teacher ratio • Sectioning of HS courses • State aid provisions • Insurance • Transportation needs • Retirement and social security needs

  12. Phase 1: Budget Planning • Budget Workshops • Budget Hearings • Budget Vote

  13. Phase 2: Receiving Funds • Responsibility of local authorities through a system of taxation, debt collection, and legal resources. • Funds are transmitted to a school district for use by community approval • Budget becomes effective on the first day of the new fiscal period.

  14. Phase 3: Spending Funds • Budget adoption leads to posting of line items. • Purpose of the budget is not to save money, but spend it wisely, and expeditiously.

  15. Phase 3: Spending Funds • Purchase Order Form (voucher) • Request or requisition form for ordering • Decision where funds can be drawn and approved by Principal (CEO) • Mailing of P.O. • Order completed, invoice received and approved by designee. • Payment fulfilled by check. • PO, invoice, copy of check filed together.

  16. Phase 4: Evaluating • Superintendent responsible for ensuring that the budget is well-conceived summary of the district’s educational plan. • Sup’t. must be able to demonstrate that it is constructed around specific purposes, objectives and guidelines that support the mission of the school. • Sup’t. must keep the BOE informed about the operation and effectiveness of the budget.

  17. July: Budget year begins September: Quarterly revision October: Data projections Population Staffing Program changes Facilities November: Staff requisitions December: Budget revisions January: Rough draft of budget needs February: equipment priorities March: budget workshops, sessions April: budget revisions May: Budget Vote June: Adoption of budget or contingency plan Phase 5: Time-line

  18. Building Level Budget Matters • Principal provides data to the superintendent: • Student enrollment, pupil-teacher ratios, course enrollments, projections for class size • Principal (Chief Education Officer) must supervise and maintain the line item expenditures assigned to his/her building.

  19. Budgeting Systems for Education • Planning/Programming/Budgeting Systems (PPBS) c. 1960’s • Cycle of planning including: • Establishing goals • Determining the financial cost of alternatives • Evaluating results • Improving the objectives • Improving the alternative plans to reach the objectives

  20. Budgeting Systems for Education • Zero-Base Budgeting (ZBB) c. 1970’s • Construction of a new budget each year from a zero base. • Every program, if it is to received continued funding, must be justified during each budget development. • A program provides a defense of its budget request that makes no reference to the level of previous appropriations. • Bottom-up organization of the budget.

  21. Budgeting Systems for Education • Site-based Budgeting c. 1980’s • Development of a budget through the involvement of teachers, community, and administration at the school level. • Matching student needs to available resources. • Giving the principal and instruction staff more control over the budget, personnel, and organization at the site level.

  22. Budgeting Systems for Education • Strategic Planning c. 1990’s • Goal setting program (2, 3 or 4 year visions) • Mission statement and district goals • Total Quality Management (TQM) • Total organizational control by all constituents.

  23. Budget Administration Issues • Auditing: • Procedure for verifying financial operations of a school district • Independent examiners • Internal Audits: qualified personnel employed by the district • State Audits: government examiners • External Audits: qualified examiners outside of district personnel

  24. Dark Side of School Leadership • http://nysosc3.osc.state.ny.us/press/releases/jan06/012406a.htm • http://newyorkmetro.com/nymetro/urban/features/9908/

  25. Cycle of Auditing F.O.B Internal Auditor External Audit Auditing Committee Board of Ed

More Related